Paddy Fahey

Paddy Fahey (or Fahy, 22 August 1916[1] – 31 May 2019) was an Irish composer and fiddler who was considered one of the finest living composers[1] of tunes that are in the style of traditional Irish music.

Fahey is from Kilconnell in East Galway. His music has a distinctive yearning, magical quality often referred to as "Draíocht".[2] His music has been recorded by many of the finest traditional Irish musicians including Martin Hayes, Planxty, John Carty and Kevin Burke. In recent years a few recordings featured Fahey's music prominently including recordings by Liz and Yvonne Kane and Breda Keville.

Fahey was something of an enigma in the traditional Irish music world in that he has never made a commercial recording despite the fact that he is an exceptional fiddler, nor has he published a book of his compositions. There are some privately made recordings of Fahey which have been distributed amongst musicians since the 1970s, and transcriptions of his tunes are found in many tune collections and on Internet resources such as www.thesession.org.[3]

Fahey never gave his compositions names, instead they tend to be simply named "Paddy Fahey's Reel No.1", "Paddy Fahey's Jig No.2", etc. His known compositions number around 60 tunes, all of which are either jigs, reels or hornpipes.

In 2001 Fahey was named Composer of The Year by Irish Language TV station TG4 at their annual award ceremony 'Gradam Ceoil TG4'. The award ceremony incorporated an extremely rare public performance with Paddy appearing alongside fellow fiddler Paddy Canny, harpist Máire Ní Chathasaigh, the band Altan and others.[4]

He died in May 2019 at the age of 102.[5][6]

Literary sources

  • Vallely, Fintan (ed.), The Companion to Traditional Irish Music. Cork University Press, Cork, 1999
  • Holohan, Maria. The Tune Compositions of Paddy Fahey. MA Thesis, University of Limerick, 1995
gollark: I don't really like them.
gollark: If you can actually do all the war stuff.
gollark: I'm just saying, finding a particularly defensible area and becoming a warlord might not be terrible.
gollark: Population density is generally higher too though, I think.
gollark: Plus, significant amounts of functional technology (and buildings!).

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.